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Back when I lived in one of the raggediest kyoushokuin juutaku (teachers’ housing) in Fukuoka Prefecture, I dreamed of getting a fog machine, speakers, and turning the place into a haunted house. While I never did it, I did decide that a big part of the soundtrack had to be from Castlevania. Especially the Michiru Yamane ones. At the same time, I didn’t want to make a playlist that tried too hard to smack you over the head with Halloweenity, nor include tracks as predictable as “This is Halloween” or “Thriller.” Not that those aren’t great tracks (I love them both), but everyone can see those coming. Thus, “All Souls’ Dance Party” came into the world. I’ve created the playlist on YouTube for your listening pleasure.

I finished the C albums for my iTunes Music Library All Music Challenge. This time, I’ll start off with the stats:

Albums Represented: 71
Albums Complete in Library: 9
Songs: 332

Nearly a third of the songs from the C albums are from Castlevania soundtracks, namely, those for Symphony of the Night, Lament of Innocence, and Curse of Darkness. I realized I had forgotten to import the second disc of the CoD soundtrack! I’ll make sure to do so when I visit home in December. I also have a few tracks from the PSP release Castlevania: The Dracula X Chronicles.

I ended up listening to the majority of these tracks at night, which turns out to be, without a doubt, the best time to listen to this music. Given the sheer number of tracks, and the fact that it’s October, I’ll choose to highlight only a few tracks that would be fitting for a Halloween Dance Party! ^o^

First up, “Anti-Soul Mysteries Lab” from Lament of Innocence:

Curse of Darkness gets hype with “Cave of Jigramunt:”

When you wanna slow things down to dance cheek-to-cheek with your Corpse Bride, let Symphony of the Night take you away with a song that I could’ve sworn was labelled as “Pearl Dance Song” in the original PSX game. These days I see it in the Wikias as “Dance of Pales.” The Japanese title, 「パール舞踏曲」(“paaru butou kyoku”) , translates literally to “Pearl Dance Song” or “Pearl Dance Music.” In another video (linked to below), it’s labelled as “Waltz of Pearls.” Whatever the English title is, it’s a track that even non-video game or Castlevania fans give props to.

Masanori Akita’s remix of “Divine Bloodlines” from The Dracula X Chronicles disc brings us back to the techno dancing:

Moving away from Castlevania, the C’s brought along the first GACKT album (since the default setting on iTunes is to sort numbers after letters; otherwise 0079-0088 would’ve been the first GACKT album to come up). Well, since Crescent is part of the Moon Saga and therefore about vampires, it still fits with the Halloween theme of this post. But what I associate this album with more than anything is ceramics.

@_@?

There’s a perfectly good reason for this. When the album came out back in 2003, I was taking a ceramics class in college. The first or second assignment was to make a coil vase at least 12 inches tall. I had gotten my pot to about 9 inches when it collapsed; I had built it out sideways too soon. I spent a lot of extra hours in the studio trying to get it right, and half those hours I had Crescent on repeat.

Enjoy one of my favorite tracks from this album, “Mind Forest.” Don’t mind the FFVII video if you don’t like it, but this video has the best sound quality.